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Deficiency in apoptosis-inducing factor recapitulates chronic kidney disease via aberrant mitochondrial homeostasis

Authors :
Coughlan, Melinda T.
Higgins, Gavin C.
Nguyen, Tuong-Vi
Penfold, Sally A.
Thallas-Bonke, Vicki
Tan, Sih Min
Ramm, Georg
Van Bergen, Nicole J.
Henstridge, Darren C.
Sourris,Karly C.
Harcourt, Brooke E.
Trounce, Ian A.
Robb, Portia M.
Laskowski, Adrienne
McGee, Sean L.
Genders, Amanda J.
Walder, Ken
Drew, Brian G.
Gregorevic, Paul
Qian, Hongwei
Thomas, Merlin C.
Jerums, George
Macisaac, Richard J.
Skene, Alison
Power, David A.
Ekinci, Elif I.
Wijeyeratne, Xiaonan W.
Gallo, Linda A.
Herman-Edelstein, Michal
Ryan, Michael T.
Cooper, Mark E.
Thorburn, David R.
Forbes, Josephine M.
Coughlan, Melinda T.
Higgins, Gavin C.
Nguyen, Tuong-Vi
Penfold, Sally A.
Thallas-Bonke, Vicki
Tan, Sih Min
Ramm, Georg
Van Bergen, Nicole J.
Henstridge, Darren C.
Sourris,Karly C.
Harcourt, Brooke E.
Trounce, Ian A.
Robb, Portia M.
Laskowski, Adrienne
McGee, Sean L.
Genders, Amanda J.
Walder, Ken
Drew, Brian G.
Gregorevic, Paul
Qian, Hongwei
Thomas, Merlin C.
Jerums, George
Macisaac, Richard J.
Skene, Alison
Power, David A.
Ekinci, Elif I.
Wijeyeratne, Xiaonan W.
Gallo, Linda A.
Herman-Edelstein, Michal
Ryan, Michael T.
Cooper, Mark E.
Thorburn, David R.
Forbes, Josephine M.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Apoptosis-inducing factor (AIF) is a mitochondrial flavoprotein with dual roles in redox signaling and programmed cell death. Deficiency in AIF is known to result in defective oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS), via loss of complex I activity and assembly in other tissues. Because the kidney relies on OXPHOS for metabolic homeostasis, we hypothesized that a decrease in AIF would result in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Here, we report that partial knockdown of Aif in mice recapitulates many features of CKD, in association with a compensatory increase in the mitochondrial ATP pool via a shift toward mitochondrial fusion, excess mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production, and Nox4 upregulation. However, despite a 50% lower AIF protein content in the kidney cortex, there was no loss of complex I activity or assembly. When diabetes was superimposed onto Aif knockdown, there were extensive changes in mitochondrial function and networking, which augmented the renal lesion. Studies in patients with diabetic nephropathy showed a decrease in AIF within the renal tubular compartment and lower AIFM1 renal cortical gene expression, which correlated with declining glomerular filtration rate. Lentiviral overexpression of Aif1m rescued glucose-induced disruption of mitochondrial respiration in human primary proximal tubule cells. These studies demonstrate that AIF deficiency is a risk factor for the development of diabetic kidney disease.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
14 p., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1133758992
Document Type :
Electronic Resource